Fiction: general and literary

Book Review: The President and the Frog by Carolina De Robertis

This is a short book, a novella, with a lot to say. The interviewer in this book seem to ask…

3 years ago

Book Review: Morningside Heights by Joshua Henkin

The novel is strongest in its depiction of the day-to-day living with a person suffering from Alzheimer’s. An undignified way…

3 years ago

Book Review: The Midnight Library by Matt Haig

Nora Seed wants to die, but instead she finds herself in a library where she could live alternate versions of…

3 years ago

Book Review: How Beautiful We Were by Imbolo Mbue

How Beautiful We Were is, in a word, fatalistic. The villagers are fighting a lost cause,– The David vs. Goliath…

3 years ago

Book Review: The Porpoise by Mark Haddon

The Porpoise by Mark Haddon is a novel following three stories in different time periods, all with a common narrative,…

5 years ago

Book Review: The Volunteer by Salvatore Scibona

The Volunteer by Salvatore Scibona tells of young boy is stranded at Hamburg Fuhlsbuettel Airport in 2010. He speaks no…

5 years ago

Book Review: The Psychology of Time Travel by Kate Mascarenhas

Four scientist invented time travel in 1967, however one of them suffers a breakdown and the other three exile her…

5 years ago

Book Review: The Angel’s Game by Carlos Ruiz Zafón

The story is about an author named David Martin who accepts an assignment to write a book for a very…

12 years ago

Book Review: The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón

The book follows a young boy named Daniel and has possibly one of the best literary inventions of the decade…

13 years ago

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